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Radiology | 2010

Diagnostic performance of 64-channel multidetector CT in the evaluation of gastric cancer: differentiation of mucosal cancer (T1a) from submucosal involvement (T1b and T2).

In Joon Lee; Jeong Min Lee; Seung Ho Kim; Cheong-II Shin; Jae Young Lee; Se Hyung Kim; Joon Koo Han; Byung Ihn Choi

PURPOSE To identify the computed tomographic (CT) findings in T1a and T1b cancers and to evaluate the diagnostic performance of multidetector CT with two-dimensional multiplanar reconstruction and three-dimensional CT gastrography for evaluating the preoperative staging of gastric cancer, with special emphasis on the differentiation between T1a and T1b cancers. MATERIALS AND METHODS The institutional review board approved this retrospective study. A total of 148 patients with gastric cancer (64 T1a, 36 T1b, and 48 T2) were included. To identify CT findings in T1a and T1b cancers, two radiologists in consensus interpreted the preoperative CT images of the 100 T1 cancers to determine the morphologic characteristics to be used as staging criteria on CT images. By using univariate and multiple logistic regression analyses, the diagnostic criteria to identify T1a and T1b cancers were developed. To evaluate the diagnostic performance of multidetector CT by using the criteria, two other blinded reviewers independently analyzed the CT images of all 148 patients to assess the T (classifying the depth of invasion as T1a, T1b, or T2) and N (classifying nodal involvement as absent or present) stage. CT staging was correlated with histopathologic results. Interobserver agreement was assessed by using weighted kappa statistics. RESULTS The detectability of T1b cancer was significantly higher than that of T1a cancer (P = .003). T1b cancer showed well-enhancing mucosal thickening more frequently than did T1a cancer (P = .002). By using the modified CT criteria, the overall accuracy values of T staging and N staging were 64.9% (96/148) and 79.1% (117/148) for reviewer 1 and 63.5% (94/148) and 83.8% (124/148) for reviewer 2, respectively. Weighted kappa values of T and N staging were 0.795 and 0.641, respectively. CONCLUSION On multidetector CT images, T1a cancer shows different imaging features than does T1b cancer regarding enhancing characteristics and detectability. Multidetector CT provides relatively valuable results of T and N staging, including differentiation between T1a, T1b, and T2 gastric cancers.


CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2011

Intercostal artery supplying hepatocellular carcinoma: demonstration of a tumor feeder by C-arm CT and multidetector row CT.

Hyo-Cheol Kim; Jin Wook Chung; In Joon Lee; Sangbu An; Nak Jong Seong; Kyu Ri Son; Hwan Jun Jae; Jae Hyung Park

This study was designed to describe tumor feeders from the intercostal artery supplying hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) on C-arm CT and multidetector row CT. From March 2008 to May 2009, C-arm CT of the intercostal artery was prospectively performed in 24 HCC patients. Two interventional radiologists, who performed C-arm CT, evaluated tumor feeders on C-arm CT and multidetector row CT scans by consensus. In total, 35 intercostal arteries were examined by C-arm CT. All tumor feeders except one showed a sharp upward turn at or near the costochondral junction. On axial C-arm CT images, all tumor feeders were observed as an enhancing dot in the upper intercostal space along the diaphragm. On multidetector CT scans, 17 tumor feeders were observed and 18 were not. Tumor feeders from the intercostal artery are observed as an enhancing dot along the diaphragm on C-arm CT and can be seen on multidetector row CT in approximately half of patients.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2009

Extrahepatic Collateral Artery Supply to the Tumor Thrombi of Hepatocellular Carcinoma Invading Inferior Vena Cava: The Prevalence and Determinant Factors

In Joon Lee; Jin Wook Chung; Hyo-Cheol Kim; Yong Hu Yin; Young Ho So; Ung Bae Jeon; Hwan Jun Jae; Baik Hwan Cho; Jae Hyung Park

PURPOSE To retrospectively evaluate the prevalence of extrahepatic collateral artery supply to tumor thrombi of hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) invading the inferior vena cava (IVC) and to assess the determining factors. MATERIALS AND METHODS From February 1998 to June 2007, 82 patients with IVC tumor thrombi on computed tomography (CT) underwent angiographic evaluation of their extrahepatic collateral artery supply. Potential determining factors for extrahepatic collateral artery supply to the IVC tumor thrombi included sex, age, Child-Pugh class, history of chemoembolization, tumor factors (ie, size, number, and growth pattern), distance from primary tumor to IVC thrombi, portal vein invasion, and extent of IVC thrombi (ie, occupying more than half the IVC lumen on transverse CT image, completely filling and distending IVC lumen, or extending into the right atrium). Univariate analysis and multiple logistic regression analysis were performed. RESULTS Fifty-four of the 82 patients (65.9%) had extrahepatic collateral artery supply: 47 from the right inferior phrenic artery, four from the right adrenal artery, two from the right internal mammary artery, and one from the right renal artery. The presence of extrahepatic collateral artery supply to IVC tumor thrombi showed a significant relationship with a history of chemoembolization (P = .001, odds ratio [OR] = 22.4) and distension of IVC by tumor thrombi (P = .005, OR = 9.1). CONCLUSIONS IVC tumor thrombi of HCCs are frequently supplied by extrahepatic collateral arteries, the most common of which is the right inferior phrenic artery. The significant determining factors are a history of chemoembolization and the extent of IVC tumor thrombi.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2014

Cone-Beam CT Hepatic Arteriography in Chemoembolization for Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Angiographic Image Quality and Its Determining Factors

In Joon Lee; Jin Wook Chung; Yong Hu Yin; Hyo-Cheol Kim; Young-Il Kim; Hwan Jun Jae; Jae Hyung Park

PURPOSE To analyze image quality and the factors that determine it for cone-beam computed tomography (CT) hepatic arteriography in chemoembolization for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). MATERIALS AND METHODS From September 2009-December 2010, 399 consecutive patients referred for chemoembolization of HCC were scheduled for cone-beam CT scan. There were 12 patients (3%) excluded because of difficulty with breath-hold. Of the 387 patients who underwent cone-beam CT hepatic arteriography, 100 patients were ultimately included in the study according to inclusion criteria. Maximum intensity projection images were scored for image quality of each segmental hepatic artery. Potential determining factors for image quality were diaphragmatic motion, portal vein enhancement, and hepatic artery-to-parenchyma enhancement ratio. The flow rate of contrast media, x-ray delay, and location of the catheter tip were also evaluated. RESULTS It was possible to trace at least subsegmental hepatic arteries in 625 of 700 segments (89.3%) on cone-beam CT hepatic arteriography. Diaphragmatic motion, prominent portal vein enhancement, and low hepatic artery-to-parenchyma enhancement ratio worsened image quality (P < .001, P = .022, and P = .017). Owing to cardiac motion artifacts, image quality of the left lateral segments (S2 and S3) was poorer compared with the remaining hepatic segments (S4-S8). CONCLUSIONS In most cases, the quality of cone-beam CT hepatic arteriography images was good enough to trace subsegmental hepatic arteries at a minimum. Respiratory and cardiac motion, portal vein enhancement, and hepatic artery-to-parenchyma enhancement ratio significantly affected the image quality of cone-beam CT hepatic arteriography.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2009

Helical CT Evaluation of the Preoperative Staging of Gastric Cancer in the Remnant Stomach

In Joon Lee; Jeong Min Lee; Se Hyung Kim; Samuel Chang; Joon Koo Han; Byung Ihn Choi; Hyuk-Joon Lee; Han-Kwang Yang; Kuhn Uk Lee

OBJECTIVE The objective of our study was to evaluate the diagnostic performance of helical CT for evaluating the preoperative staging of gastric cancer in the remnant stomach. MATERIALS AND METHODS Preoperative helical CT images of 67 patients with gastric cancer in the remnant stomach were independently analyzed regarding staging of the tumor by two radiologists who were blinded to histopathologic and surgical results. The differences in their assessments were resolved by consensus including the opinion of a third radiologist. The radiologists were asked to determine the depth of tumor invasion of the gastric wall (T stage), classifying it as </= T2, T3, or T4; local lymph node involvement (N stage); and solid organ metastasis or peritoneal involvement (M stage). TNM staging on CT was correlated with the histopathologic results of the resected specimen or with the surgical findings. Interobserver agreement was assessed using weighted kappa statistics. RESULTS The overall accuracy of T staging for reviewers 1 and 2 and for the consensus reading were 83.6%, 78.2%, and 85.4%, respectively. Five of 34 </= T2 lesions were misdiagnosed as T3. The cause of the overstaging was the misconception of the postoperative fibrotic change of the anastomotic site as perigastric tumoral infiltration. Three of 18 T4 lesions were understaged because of inadequate gastric distention (n = 1) and misinterpretation of adjacent organ involvement as partial volume averaging (n = 2). The accuracy of N staging and M staging were 81.8% and 94.0% for reviewer 1; 78.2% and 91.0% for reviewer 2; and 81.8% and 94.0% for the consensus reading, respectively. The weighted kappa values of T staging, N staging, and M staging were 0.676, 0.619, and 0.924, respectively. CONCLUSION Contrast-enhanced helical CT can be used successfully to preoperatively evaluate the staging of remnant stomach cancer in patients who have undergone previous gastric resection.


Investigative Radiology | 2013

Improved drug targeting to liver tumors after intra-arterial delivery using superparamagnetic iron oxide and iodized oil: preclinical study in a rabbit model.

In Joon Lee; Cheol-Hee Ahn; Eui-Joon Cha; In Jae Chung; Jin Wook Chung; Young-Il Kim

PurposeThe purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility and the therapeutic efficacy of a novel drug-delivery system that uses superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) and iodized oil (IO) to improve the selective intra-arterial (IA) drug delivery to an experimentally induced hepatic tumor. Materials and MethodsThis animal study was approved by our institutional animal care and use committee. Fifteen rabbits with hepatic VX2 carcinomas were treated with IA delivery of 4 different agents: doxorubicin alone (group A, n = 3), doxorubicin/IO (group B, n = 3), a doxorubicin/SPIO complex (group C, n = 4), and a doxorubicin/SPIO/IO complex (group D, n = 5). The infused doxorubicin dose was 1 mg for all groups. The serum doxorubicin concentration was measured at 0, 5, 30, 60, and 120 minutes after the delivery. To assess the distribution of the SPIO, magnetic resonance (MR) scans were performed at day 7 after the delivery, when computed tomographic scans were performed in addition to MR in group B and D to assess the distribution of IO. After the completion of follow-up imaging, all the animals were euthanized to measure the intratumoral doxorubicin concentration and to assess tumor viability through pathologic examination. ResultsGroups C and D demonstrated significantly lower MR signal intensities, which inversely corresponded to SPIO deposition, in the tumor areas than did groups A and B. Group D exhibited the lowest serum doxorubicin concentration at all time points up to 180 minutes after the delivery, suggesting minimal passage of doxorubicin into the systemic circulation. The intratumoral doxorubicin concentrations were 72.4 ng/g for group A, 142.0 ng/g for group B, 264.1 ng/g for group C, and 679.6 ng/g for group D. The proportion of viable tumor cells were 65.3% for group A, 1.3% for group B, 17.0% for group C, and 0.1% for group D. ConclusionsThe drug-delivery system developed using SPIO and IO can result in better drug targeting when it is used for IA delivery to liver cancer. The results of this study warrant further investigation of this potential clinical treatment of advanced liver cancer.


Korean Journal of Radiology | 2008

Intrahepatic Extramedullary Hematopoiesis Mimicking a Hypervascular Hepatic Neoplasm on Dynamic- and SPIO-Enhanced MRI

In Joon Lee; Se Hyung Kim; Dae Sik Kim; Jeong Min Lee; Joon Koo Han; Byung Ihn Choi

We present a rare case of a focal intrahepatic extramedullary hematopoiesis (EMH) that mimicked a hypervascular hepatic neoplasm in a 33-year-old woman with idiopathic myelofibrosis. The lesion showed homogeneous and persistent enhancement on both contrast-enhanced CT and gadolinium-enhanced dynamic MR imaging. The lesion did not demonstrate an apparent signal drop on a T2*-weighted sequence following administration of a superparamagnetic iron-oxide agent (SHU 555A). A hepatocellular adenoma was the initial radiological diagnosis. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of a histopathologically proven intrahepatic EMH evaluated with dynamic- and SPIO-enhanced MRI.


Korean Journal of Radiology | 2013

Evaluation of the In Vivo Efficiency and Safety of Hepatic Radiofrequency Ablation Using a 15-G Octopus® in Pig Liver

Eun Sun Lee; Jeong Min Lee; Kyung Won Kim; In Joon Lee; Joon Koo Han; Byung Ihn Choi

Objective To determine in vivo efficacy of radiofrequency ablation (RFA) in porcine liver by using 15-gauge Octopus® (15-G Octopus®) electrodes to create a large coagulation. Materials and Methods A total of 18 coagulations were created by using a 180-W generator and 15-G Octopus® electrodes during laparotomy, performed in 14 pigs. Coagulation necrosis was created in the pig livers by the use of one of three RFA protocols: 1) group A, monopolar RFA using a 15-G Octopus® electrode with a 5-mm inter-electrode distance (n = 4); 2) group B, monopolar RFA using a 15-G Octopus® electrode with a 10-mm inter-electrode distance (n = 6); and 3) group C, switching monopolar RFA using two 15-G Octopus® electrodes (n = 8). The energy efficiency, shape, maximum and minimum diameters (Dmx and Dmi), and the volume of the coagulation volume were measured in each group. The Summary statistics were obtained and Mann-Whitney test was were performed. Results The mean ablated volume of each group was 49.23 cm3 in A, 64.11 cm3 in B, and 72.35 cm3 in C. The mean Dmx and Dmi values were 5.68 cm and 4.58 cm in A and 5.97 cm and 4.97 cm in B, respectively. In group C, the mean diameters of Dmx and Dmi were 6.80 cm and 5.11 cm, respectively. The mean ratios of Dmi/Dmx were 1.25, 1.20, and 1.35 in groups A, B, and C, respectively. There was one animal death during the RFA procedure, the cause of which could not be subsequently determined. However, there were no other significant, procedure-related complications during the seven-hour-delayed CT scans. Conclusion RFA procedures using 15-G Octopus® electrodes are useful and safe for creating a large ablation in a single electrode model as well as in the multiple electrodes model.


Korean Journal of Radiology | 2011

Hepatocellular Carcinomas Smaller Than 4 cm Supplied by the Intercostal Artery: Can We Predict Which Intercostal Artery Supplies the Tumor?

Saebeom Hur; Hyo-Cheol Kim; Jin Wook Chung; Minuk Kim; Ji Dae Kim; Gyoung Min Kim; In Joon Lee; Young Il Kim; Hwan Jun Jae; Jae Hyung Park

Objective To predict which intercostal artery supplies a tumor by examining the spatial relationship between hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and the intercostal artery feeding the tumor on transverse computed tomography (CT) images. Materials and Methods Between January 2000 and September 2009, 46 intercostal arteries supplying HCCs smaller than 4 cm were noted in 44 patients, and CT scans and angiograms of these patients were retrospectively reviewed. The intercostal artery feeding the tumor was marked on the CT scan showing the center of the tumor. In addition, its spatial relationship with the tumor center was examined. The angle of the tumor location was measured on the transverse CT scan in the clockwise direction from the sagittal line on the virtual circle centered in the right hemithorax. Correlations between the angle of the tumor location and the level of the tumor-feeding intercostal artery were assessed with the Spearman rank coefficient. Results Of 46 intercostal arteries feeding HCC, 39 (85%) were the first ones observed from the tumor center in a counterclockwise direction on the transverse CT image containing the tumor center. The level of the tumor-feeding intercostal artery was significantly correlated with the angle of the tumor, as the posteriorly located tumor tends to be supplied by lower intercostal arteries, while the laterally located tumor by upper intercostal arteries (Spearman coefficient = -0.537; p < 0.001). Conclusion We can predict the tumor feeder with an accuracy of 85% as the first intercostal artery encountered from the tumor center in a counterclockwise direction on a transverse CT image.


Liver International | 2014

Long‐term outcomes of second treatment after initial transarterial chemoembolization in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma

Young-Il Kim; Joong-Won Park; Hee-Won Kwak; Bo Hyun Kim; Ju Hee Lee; In Joon Lee; Tae Hyun Kim; Seong Hoon Kim; Young Hwan Koh; Hyun Beom Kim; Chang-Min Kim

All outcome studies concerning the management of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are based on the initial treatment. However, remaining, progressing or recurring tumours (RPRTs) after transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) are common; therefore, various second treatments are administered to HCC patients. Here, we investigated the long‐term outcomes of second treatments for RPRT after initial TACE.

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Jin Wook Chung

Seoul National University Hospital

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Hyo-Cheol Kim

Seoul National University Hospital

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Hwan Jun Jae

Seoul National University Hospital

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Jeong Min Lee

Seoul National University Hospital

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Joon Koo Han

Seoul National University Hospital

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Hyun Beom Kim

Seoul National University

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Se Hyung Kim

Seoul National University Hospital

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